Abstract

Protein–polysaccharides of femoral articular cartilage from pigs of ages 9 months and 5 weeks were compared after extraction at pH6·8 with iso-osmotic sodium acetate followed by 0·63m-calcium acetate. The cartilage from the younger animals had a higher moisture content and contained considerably larger amounts of protein–polysaccharide, but less than half as much collagen/g. dry weight, than cartilage from the older pigs. There was notably less keratan sulphate in the fractions from the less mature animals. After gel filtration on 6% agarose, elution profiles of the calcium acetate extracts were similar to those of the sodium acetate extracts of the same tissue. Chemical analyses, however, showed that in both age-groups the extraction procedure had achieved a sequential solubilization of protein–polysaccharides in that the initial extracts contained a higher proportion of keratan sulphate than those that were extracted subsequently. Both extracts from the older animals contained up to 25% of a relatively small protein–polysaccharide that was retarded on 6% agarose and that had a lower protein content and less keratan sulphate than the larger protein–polysaccharides. In contrast, in extracts from the less mature cartilage only about 5% of the protein–polysaccharides were small enough to be retarded by 6% agarose, suggesting that the small components may not be precursors of the larger. The average length of chondroitin sulphate chains, as calculated from the analytical data, was the same in the smaller protein–polysaccharides as in the larger.